An 83-year-old woman is sent to the emergency department from the nursing home where she resides for evaluation of mental status changes. At baseline, she has mild memory impairment but is otherwise cognitively intact, calm, and cooperative with the nursing home staff. Over the past 24 hours, she has become increasingly combative and agitated and stayed up all night. Behavioral interventions and environmental modifications have not been helpful. The patient's medical conditions include hypertension and a history of anxiety and depression. Temperature is 37.2 C (99 F) , blood pressure is 110/80 mm Hg, pulse is 84/min, and respirations are 18/min. Neurological examination is normal, but the patient is unable to attend to the conversation, is mildly disoriented, and cannot state the days of the week backwards. Without provocation, she strikes out at a nurse's aide standing next to her. Laboratory results are normal except for urinalysis, which shows an increased presence of white blood cells and is positive for nitrites. Head CT scan is negative. In addition to starting antibiotic therapy, which of the following medications is most appropriate to treat this patient's behavioral symptoms?
A) Clozapine
B) Doxepin
C) Haloperidol
D) Lithium
E) Lorazepam
F) Temazepam
Correct Answer:
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